Does Group Familiarity Improve Deliberations in Judicial Teams? Evidence from the German Federal Court of Justice

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Abstract

Collegiality plays a central role in judicial decision-making. However, we still lack empirical evidence about the effects of collegiality on judicial decision-making. In this article, I argue familiarity, an antecedent to collegiality, improves judicial deliberations by encouraging minority dissent and a more extensive debate of different legal viewpoints. Relying on a novel dataset of 21,613 appeals in criminal cases at the German Federal Court of Justice between 1990 and 2016, I exploit quasi-random assignment of cases to decision-making groups to show that judges' pairwise familiarity substantially increases the probability that judges schedule a main hearing after first-stage deliberations. Group familiarity also increases the length of the justification of the ruling. The findings have implications for the way courts organize the assignment of judges to panels.

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Swalve, T. (2022). Does Group Familiarity Improve Deliberations in Judicial Teams? Evidence from the German Federal Court of Justice. Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 19(1), 223–249. https://doi.org/10.1111/jels.12308

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